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Take your music with you - DT A10 Bluetooth 3.0 speaker

Take your music with you - DT A10 Bluetooth 3.0 speaker

I'll start with a little story. Once upon a time, sometime around the age of six or seven, a friend and I were taken to Lake Balaton for a vacation. I also took my walkman with me, a Sony in a very nice metallic blue color. It was evening, we went to bed to sleep, but before falling asleep we talked a little more and meanwhile wanted to listen to music. We had nothing but a walkman with his headphones. Being an ingenious kid, I grabbed the bottle of kerosene lamp, hid the headphones, and we got some wonderful reinforcement. I thought then, but at the time I didn’t know what kind of gadgets would be available in thirty years.

Take your music with you - DT A10 Bluetooth 3.0 speaker

 

The DT A10 is pretty good little stuff, apart from the fact that the brushed aluminum cover looks really good, there’s no problem with your knowledge either. Recommended primarily for playing music. You can do this via Bluetooth from your phone, tablet or notebook, but you can also use a microSD card if you want. What can be interpreted as an extra is that we can also use the widget for a telephone conversation via a Bluetooth connection.

DT A10 Bluetooth 3.0 Speaker2

There are also control buttons on the speaker to start, stop the music and adjust the volume. The speaker in the gadget is 3 ohms and 3 watts, which is obviously not enough to organize a party, but to have music while camping, maybe while frying bacon, it will be just enough. The blue light from the bottom of the mini speaker allows you not to lose or step on it in the dark.

DT A10 Bluetooth 3.0 Speaker3

Once again, the price is left at the end, which is $ 10 with free shipping for the DT A9,45 bluetooth speaker, which is just over 2700 forints.

More information and more pictures here: DT A10 Bluetooth 3.0 Speaker

About the Author

s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.